We’ve heard from a few people that the EF 70-200 f/2.8L is in the process of being discontinued.

A few people have said they have attempted to get broken lenses fixed and have been told by Canon USA that parts for the repair are no longer available and will not be in the future either.

Another report says an EF 70-200 f/2.8L that was in disrepair was replaced with a refurbished EF 70-200 f/2.8L IS II at no extra cost. However, don’t go breaking your lenses, as this may have been a one off.

I would imagine the current stock of the lens at retailers will probably be the last of them. I’ve heard nothing about a replacement for the lens, even though I do think there is a place for Non-IS lenses such as this one.

I hope that's not true, since it's $1000 cheaper than the IS version, and I use my 70-200 f/2.8L all the time. Since I went full-frame, it's my most-used, most versatile lens. Shooting bands, I usually use 1/160 shutter speed and run it f/2.8 and get great close-ups of band members playing user stage lights with no flash, and it's a great indoor lens for a big venue (although not so useful in a tighter indoor venue like a house).

Not surprised that they discontinued the lens. Too many SKUs increases cost and this lens is similar to others in their line up. I am surprised that they will not repair it - actually I should say shocked as Canon CS is general great. Wonder if the incident was a one off or policy.

I hope that's not true, since it's $1000 cheaper than the IS version, and I use my 70-200 f/2.8L all the time. Since I went full-frame, it's my most-used, most versatile lens. Shooting bands, I usually use 1/160 shutter speed and run it f/2.8 and get great close-ups of band members playing user stage lights with no flash, and it's a great indoor lens for a big venue (although not so useful in a tighter indoor venue like a house).

hmmm...that's got me a'thinkin ...lol.

I wonder if the value of it will go up now. Either way, I plan on using mine for at least another year!

This is just a rumor so far. I'm eager to get confirmation by someone "in the know". I know that my lens probably won't disintegrate on me so this probably won't be an issue for me, but there's the small probability that it could.

A lot about this sounds odd. Why would they not repair a lens that they're still selling from canon direct? I understand retailer stock could last longer than their own, but still... I have a 70-200 with a UA date code that I damn well expect they'll at least be able to repair until the end of its warantee period (another 4 months). Also, I can see why they'd discontinue one of their 70-200s, given that there are 5 of them, but why they'd pick the non-is over the IS mkI is beyond me... bigger differentiation between it and the mk II, plus this one is sharper than the mk I...

I completely agree. There is a $1000 price difference between IS and non IS versions. I have owned the non IS version for several years now and have no complaints. If I was force to replace now there is no way I can justify a $2300 replacement for my $1300 lens. I would be shopping third party lenses..... Canon continues it's drive to outprice many of us out of it's lenses.....

I'm a little disappointed, but not really surprised. I'm starting to seriously consider getting one of the 70-200's and have been leaning towards different ones depending on the day of the week. The 2.8 IS II is way too overpriced for my mainly hobbyist budget, so I've been looking at around the $1g mark. That leaves three options: the f4 at $650, the f4 IS at ~1000, and the f2.8 at ~1000. I tend to lean away from the f4 since I really want IS at that aperture, but have had a hard time deciding between the f4 IS or the f2.8.

At the same price, it's tough to decide between a 3-stop IS system (steady shots at slower shutter), or a 1-stop faster aperture (faster moving subjects)

With the f2.8 being discontinued, that pretty much makes up my mind for me. Now to find the money....